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Increased functional activity, bottom-up and intrinsic effective connectivity in autism

Roshini Randeniya, Iris Vilares, Jason B. Mattingley, Marta I. Garrido

2022NeuroImage Clinical14 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

• Autism spectrum group shows increased BOLD activity compared to neurotypicals during a sensory learning task . • Groups show no differences in BOLD activity for Prior and Likelihood conditions in the sensory learning task. • Effective hyperconnectivity in bottom-up and intrinsic connections underlies increased functional activity during sensory learning in the autism spectrum group. Sensory perceptual alterations such as sensory sensitivities in autism have been proposed to be caused by differences in sensory observation (Likelihood) or in forming models of the environment (Prior), which result in an increase in bottom-up information flow relative to top-down control. To investigate this conjecture, we had autistic individuals (AS) and neurotypicals (NT) perform a decision-under-uncertainty paradigm while undergoing functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI). There were no group differences in task performance and in Prior and Likelihood representations in brain activity. However, there were significant group differences in overall task activity, with the AS group showing significantly greater activation in the bilateral precuneus, mid-occipital gyrus, cuneus, superior frontal gyrus (SFG) and left putamen relative to the NT group. Further, when pooling the data across both groups, we found that those with higher AQ scores showed greater activity in the left cuneus and precuneus. Effective connectivity analysis using dynamic causal modelling (DCM) revealed that group differences in BOLD signals were underpinned by increased activity within sensory regions and a net increase in bottom-up connectivity from the occipital region to the precuneus and the left SFG. These findings support the hypothesis of increased bottom-up information flow in autism during sensory learning tasks.

Topics & Concepts

CuneusPrecuneusFunctional magnetic resonance imagingMedial frontal gyrusPsychologyLingual gyrusSensory systemSuperior frontal gyrusNeuroscienceMiddle temporal gyrusAutism Spectrum Disorder ResearchFunctional Brain Connectivity StudiesObsessive-Compulsive Spectrum Disorders